MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL DETROIT 3, Milwaukee 1 BOSTON 7, Oakland 2 Seattle 8, CLEVELAND 4 BALTIMORE 4, Minnesota 1 N.Y. YANKEES 5, Anaheim 4 Kansas City 7, TORONTO 5 TEXAS 5, Chicago White Sox 2 Colorado 10, CHICAGO CUBS 7 St. Louis 9, FLORIDA 3 San Francisco 8, PHILADELPHIA 4 PITTSBURGH 3, San Diego 2 ATLANTA 3, Cincinnati 0 N.Y. METS 5, L.A. Dodgers 0 Montreal 7, HOUSTON 2 PRO BASKETBALL ATLANTA 109, New Jersey 101 Utah 127, PHOENIX 122 HOUSTON 123, L.A. Clippers 119 MILWAUKEE 92, Toronto 85 Wednesday April 16, 1997 19 Baseball Bowled over for last time By Tracy Sandler Daily Sports Writer After a 16-3 loss yesterday and a 5-0 defeat two weeks ago, the Michigan baseball team was probably pretty happy to say goodbye to Bowling Green for the season. After sweeping Northwestern over the weekend to capture the top spot in the Big Ten, the Wolverines (22-13) could not get it together to beat the Falcons (16-14). As has been the team's main area of concern all season, sub- par pitching took Michigan out of the game. Senior Marion Wright (1-1) started the game for the Wolverines, going 4- plus innings before turning the ball over to pitcher/catcher Mike Haskell. Before leaving the game, Wright gave up five runs on six hits, walking four batters. "I take a big part of the blame," Wright said. "I didn't feel that I did my job. We have a competitive team. Not that I'm not competitive, but I've seen better days." Life did not get much better for Michigan after Wright sat down. Haskell didn't last the inning. Of the 10 batters he faced, he allowed seven runson four hits, giving up four free passes. He then handed the ball over to sophomore Brad Scheiner. By the time the inning ended, the Falcons had roughed up the Wolverines' pitching staff for nine runs and a 9-3 lead, which Bowling Green never relin- quished. "Marlon kept us in the game for the first -few innings, but then the game came apart on us;" Zahn said. "We did- n't hit cutoff men very well today. Other than that, when you don't get good pitching at critical times in the ball game - and we walked way too many guys - then it makes the whole team lok kind of bad." Due to a sore arm, third baseman Mike Cervenak did not see any action. Usual shortstop Brian Kalczynski took Cervenak's place, which gave freshman Kevin Quinn a chance at shortstop. Rob Bobeda took over for Brian Bush in centerfield but was replaced by Bush in the sixth inning. Freshman Andrew Miller took over Haskell's duties behind the plate. Although the new faces slightly changed team dynamics, they may not have been the cause of the Wolverines' poor performance. "I think it has a little bit to do with it, but it's no excuse,"' second baseman and team captain Kirk Beermann said. "Everybody that was in our lineup today has played enough this year. You can't play the same guys everyday, and sometimes everybody needs a rest. I don't know if it had anything to do with it. "I think people just weren't focused, and we couldn't get on track. After we got behind, we realized we weren't playing well, and we just couldn't do anything to get back in the groove." If there were any bright spots for the Wolverines yesterday, they were Scheiner and pitcher Mario Garza Jr. After the fifth inning, Scheiner did give up three runs on six hits, but he did not throw horribly. Garza pitched a no-hit eighth and ninth, fanning three batters. "I thought Scheiner, who hasn't pitched, came in and threw pretty well," Zahn said. "Mario threw pretty well. You give up nine runs in an inning, and you walk eight guys in a ballgame, it's going to be tough to win. We had four hits, and if this club only gets four hits, we're not going to win too many games."' Disappointing as the day was, Michigan will not dwell on its perfor- mance. They have to come right back today to play at Western Michigan, and pitcher Brian Berryman will start "He's another one we're trying to get going" Zahn said. "We're going to be alright. We lost today. We just have to take it as one loss and not the end of the season. You can't get down about it. You learn from mistakes." } Bats return. assoftball takes two By John Friedberg Daily Sports Writer Well, the bats are back. For a couple of innings anyway. Michigan (7-4 Big Ten, 36-12-1 overall) used the big inning to sweep a doubleheader over last-place Penn State (1- 12, 20-14), 5-1 and 9-3, at Alumni Field yesterday. Michigan scored all five of its runs in the third inning of the first game and seven of its nine in the second inning of the second game. "It's contagious," Michigan coach Carol Hutchins said of her team's hitting. "When a few of us hit,,it shows that we ca* hit and gets everybody's confidence up. Plus, it takes the pressure off." Michigan's offensive effort in the first game was high- lighted by right fielder Cathy Davie's grand slam. Davie lined the first pitch over the right center field wall for her fifth home run. It was Davie's first career grand slam. The second game was highlighted by Michigan's seven- run second inning, in which 12 Wolverines came to the plate. Sophomore Tammy Mika hit a 1-1 pitch over the left field wall for her second home run of the season. After a walk to Traci Conrad, Jen Smith smacked her second home run to th same part of the field. Jessica Lang walked, and Penn Stat coach Robin Petrini had seen enough. Sara Henick relieved Penn State starter Jaci Kalp, allowed a single to Pam Kosanke, and walked Kellyn Tate, loading the bases for Lisa Kelley. Kelley looped what appeared to be a lazy fly ball to left. But Penn State's Susannah Forde was shallow in left field and the ball soared over her for a three-run double to round out the scoring in the second. After Davie scored an unearned run in the fourth, third baseman Melissa Gentile finished the Michigan scoring i 4 y-.the seventh inning with a solo home run to left. It was th freshman's second homer of the season. In the first inning of the first game, it appeared that Penn State would be the offensive force of the afternoon. Penn State shortstop Brandi Contri led off the game with a double to left center off pitcher Kelly Holmes. Contri would move to third on Forde's bunt single. After Shannon Salsburg struck out, cleanup hitter Karolyn Peterson came to the plate. Peterson tried to squeeze the run home but bunted through ROB GILMORE/Daily a Holmes change-up. Catcher Jen Smith was able to throw The Michigan softball team had a productive day yesterday, winning a pair of games against Penn State, out Contri, who strayed too far from third. Peterson ended up 5.1 and 9-3. Jamie Gillies, shown above, saw relief action in both games. See LIONS, Page 1s Unusual sources provide offensive punch Smith, Gentile, Mika provide power, consistency at plate while offense takes sabbatical By Josh Kleinbaum Daily Sports Writer Fourteen runs. Twenty hits. Four home runs. All in two games. After taking a 10-day hiatus, the Michigan softball team's offense came back to life yesterday as the Wolverines swept a doubleheader against Penn State, 9-3 and 5-1. The Wolverines were making a statement. After 10 days in which their offense averaged less than three runs per game, they said, "Don't worry about us, we're back." And they're not only back, they're better. "It's easy to hit when we don't feel pressure," Michigan coach Carol Hutchins said. "When it's a tight game and we're not scoring runs, it puts a lot of pressure on our offense. N--v > / y..~-- bench last year in pinch-runner roles. Her .387 bat- ting average for the year has been boosted by her per- formance in the past 10 games, a span in which she has batted .419 in 31 at-bats. Gentile was barely batting over .230 10 games ago, but since then, she has boosted her average to .277. Smith has only batted .250 over the past 10 games, but she has shown power over that span, hitting her only two home runs of the sea- son. But despite these strong per- formances, the Wolverines have struggled, primarily because the big-time hitters were struggling. ' Cathie Davie batted .231 during the eight-game offensive slump, : and although Traci Conrad played well when' she was in the lineup, she missed four games due to a sprained left shoulder. Mika Those hitters weren't getting it done, because they weren't showing patience at the plate. They were swinging at change-ups out of the strike zone with less than two strikes. With two strikes, the batter has to protect the plate, especially with the magically expanding strike zones of Big Ten umpires. But when the batter is ahead in the count, she can't jump at those pitches. Yesterday, the Wolverines showed patience at the plate, as they had done for the first two months of the season. And they reaped the awards. When the top of the lineup started hitting, coupled with the increased production from the bottom of the order, Michigan was a force to be reckoned with, Everything was working for the Wolverines. They were getting production from the entire lineup, from Davie's grand slam in the first game to Smith's homer in the second. If there's a concern, it shouldn't be the offense. It should be pitcher Jamie Gillies. In the wake of an injury to star pitcher Sara Griffin, Gillies has been asked to step it up, as the pitching rotation has been cut to two. She hasn't. The freshman entered the first game in relief, after Kelly Holmes turned in a masterful performance, giving up only three hits in five scoreless innings. I* just two innings of work, Gillies let up one run on three hits, walked two and struck out one. In the second game, she again relieved Holmes, this time allowing one earned run on five hits in three innings. Since Griffin's injury, Gillies-has allowed 16 runs in 23.1 innings - an ERA of 4.85, more than double her ERA the rest of the season. In her four starts in that span, twice she has not pitched beyond,'the fourth inning. "We need (Gillies) to get her-confidence back an* pitch the way she's capable of pitching," Hutchins said. "It's tough to have confidence as a freshman, and we just want to make sure she stays confident' Gillies has shown impressive flashes, highlighted by a streak of 12 1/3 innings pitched without "an earned run, as well as a complete game shutout over Ball State. But since then, she has struggled. Her pitches aren't finding the plate, and her fastball seems much more hittable than it did two weeks ago. MARK FRIEDMAN/Daily Ichigan freshman catcher Andrew Miller wasn't able to hold onto the ball on this play. The Wolverines dropped the game to Bowling Green as well. 1 Yearbooks are coming Available for pick-up on the Diag or in the Fishbowl They played today without pressure, because we got some runs on the board early." The Wolverines showed patience at the plate - something they haven't done much lately - and took advantage of Penn State mistakes, hitting two home runs on high fastballs thrown with two strikes on the batter. During the offensive drought, the bulk of the Wolverines' production has come from unlikely sources - Jen Smith, Melissa Gentile and Tammy Mika. Mika has been strong all season, which is a sur- prise in itself, as she predominantly came off the Divine 9ntervention helps 01 so